FTX seeks to reverse payments made to Shaq, Naomi Osaka and Miami Heat
Jesse Coghlan7 hours agoFTX seeks to reverse payments made to Shaq, Naomi Osaka and Miami HeatFTX laid out the millions it paid to the likes of Shaquille O’Neal, Naomi Osaka and other high-profile people that it’s looking to get back.2469 Total views8 Total sharesListen to article 0:00NewsJoin us on social networksBankrupt crypto exchange FTX is probing if it can reclaim the millions of dollars paid to celebrity athletes and sports teams that promoted the exchange before it filed for bankruptcy last November.
In an over-180-page Aug. 31 court filing, FTX’s financial advisers laid out a detailed list of high-profile figures and businesses it paid in its marketing efforts to see if they’re under rules allowing bankrupt companies to reverse the payments.
The list includes $750,000 made to former basketball pro Shaquille O’Neal, over $300,000 to Tennis pro Naomi Osaka, over $270,000 to former baseball star David Ortiz and over $200,000 to American football quarterback Trevor Lawrence.Highlighted excerpt of payments FTX said its made to various athletes and professional sports teams. Source: Kroll
Also included are nearly $420,000 made to pro basketball team the Golden State Warriors and over $250,000 in various payments to Miami Heat.
The filing warned, however, that the final amount FTX may recover from the efforts “may vary materially from the amount reported.”
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Many of the celebrities named in FTX’s recent filing have faced class-action lawsuits from FTX users seeking damages.
O’Neal, Osaka and the Golden State Warriors have been sued by groups of FTX customers over allegedly promoting the exchange — which they claim sold unregistered securities.
The exchange has launched a series of lawsuits to try recover funds with the most recent on Sep. 9 against cross-chain protocol LayerZero Labs in a bid to claw back $21 million that FTX alleged was illegally withdrawn prior to the exchange"s bankruptcy in November last year.
In July it sued co-founder Sam Bankman-Fried and other former top executives to try to recover more than $1 billion in funds they allegedly misappropriated.
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